A cock and bull story

Meaning

A fanciful and unbelievable tale.

Origin

[image: The cock and bull]It is widely reported that this phrase originated
at Stony Stratford ("*The Jewel of Milton Keynes*"), Buckinghamshire,
England. Visitors to Milton Keynes might feel the bar for 'jewel' status is
set rather low in that region, although Stony Stratford is indeed a rather
pleasant market town.

Stony Stratford, which name derived from '*the stony ford on the Roman road*',
is located on the old Roman road of Watling Street, now the A5. In the
height of the coaching era - the 18th and early 19th centuries - Stony
Stratford was an important stopping-off point for mail and passenger coaches
travelling between London and the North of England. This coaching history is
the source of the supposed origin of the phrase 'cock and bull story'.

[image: cock and bull]The Cock and the Bull were two of the main coaching
inns in the town and the banter and rivalry between groups of travellers is
said to have resulted in exaggerated and fanciful stories, which became
known as 'cock and bull stories'. The two hostelries did, and still do,
exist.

By now, you may have noticed the 'widely reported' and 'supposed' adjectives
above and picked up that I don't believe a word of it. It is an appealing
story but, regrettably, it is little more than that. There's no evidence
whatsoever to connect the two inns with the phrase, apart from the
coincidence of the two names.

[image: cock and bull]Whisper it not in Stony Stratford if you want to get
out alive, but it's more likely that the phrase comes from old folk tales
that featured magical animals. The early 17th century French term
'coq-a-l'âne' was glossed in Randle Cotgrave's *A Dictionarie of the French
and English Tongues*, 1611 as meaning:

An incoherent story, passing from one subject to another.

The literal translation of 'du coq à l'âne' is 'from rooster to jackass',
which nicely fits the meaning of the term. This was later taken up in Scots
as "cockalayne", again with the same meaning. The first citation of 'cock
and bull' stories in English is from Robert Burton's *The Anatomy of
Melancholy*, 1621:

"Some mens whole delight is to talk of a Cock and Bull over a pot."

This reference to 'a cock' and 'a bull', which is duplicated in all the
early 17th and 18th century citations of the phrase, lends support to the
view that the stories were *about* cocks and bulls, i.e. fanciful tales,
rather than stories told *in* the Cock or the Bull. The early date doesn't
entirely rule out the coaching inn story, as coaches were used for transport
in England prior to 1621 and both establishments were in business before
that date but, in my view, that derivation is a 20th century invention.

What is missing from the Stony Stratford tale, and this is commonplace in
folk-etymological sources that attempt to connect language with a particular
place (see by hook and by crook<http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/82400.html>,
for example), is any link between the supposed origin and the meaning of the
phrase. Why should patrons of the Cock and the Bull have been any more
likely to make up fanciful tales than anyone else?

Neither the Cock nor the Bull has distinguished itself in the making of the
English language. The Bull now languishes under the outrageous 'Inn Famous
Bull' pun on its inn sign. The Cock, in addition to the 'cock and bull
story', has another cock and bull story all to itself. It is said to be the
source of the nursery rhyme line 'ride a cock horse to Banbury Cross'. The
story goes that horses were hired at the Cock Inn by travellers on route to
nearby Banbury. Again, this is tosh. A cockhorse has been a nursery term
since at least the early 16th century, as this citation from Sir Thomas
Elyot's *The Image of Governance,* 1540, indicates:

"The dotyng pleasure to see my littell soonne ride on a cokhorse."

It isn't clear whether cockhorses were originally sticks with horses' heads
that children played with or a reference to children being bounced on the
knee of an adult. What they were definitely not were horses hired from a pub
thirty miles away.

There doesn't seem to be a direct link from 'cock and bull' to 'bullshit',
meaning rubbish or nonsense, which is a 20th century US term. 'Bull' is
associated with made up stories from around the date of the earliest 'cock
and bull' citation though, as in this quotation from J. Taylor, 1630:

"Wit and Mirth ... Made vp, and fashioned into Clinches, Bulls, Quirkes,
Yerkes, Quips, and Ierkes."




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